41 Mo. 447 | Mo. | 1867
delivered the opinion of the court.
It appears that the plaintiff leased the premises in dispute to the defendant for one year, and gave him possession. But before the expiration of the lease, all the right, title and interest of the plaintiff in the land had been sold and conveyed to one Lewis Brecker, under a judgment and order of sale in partition in a suit in which the lessor was a party plaintiff, claiming as a tenant in common with the other parties; and upon the expiration of the term, the lessee took a new lease from the purchaser at the partition sale, and continued to hold the possession. The plaintiff brings this action of unlawful detainer against him under the statute, alleging that he was holding over wilfully and without force—Gen. Stat. 1866, ch. 187, § 3.
Eor his defence, the defendant relied upon the record of the partition suit, the sheriff’s deed under the order of sale, and his lease from the purchaser. This evidence was introduced for the purpose of showing a derivative title from the lessor himself since the date of the lease.
The court instructed the jury for the plaintiff to the effect that the tenant could not dispute the title of his landlord, nor the court inquire into the matter of title, in this form of ac
An instruction was refused for the defendant to the effect that, upon the evidence offered to prove a derivative title from the lessor to the defendant, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Under the provisions of the statute (Gen. Stat. 1866, ch. 187, §§ 36-40 ) this evidence was admissible, and the instruction should have been given. By these sections heirs, devisees, grantees, and assigns are entitled to this remedy in the same manner as the ancestor, devisor, grantor, or assignor, and evidence or proof of rights under derivative titles since the demise is made admissible in this action. These provisions were first enacted in the revision of 1855. The older decisions bearing upon this point can no longer govern this question. Holland v. Reed, 11 Mo. 605; Picot v. Masterson, 12 Mo. 303. That a grantee of the plaintiff who had by his own act and deed made the grant could show such conveyance of the lessor’s title and right of possession to himself, and maintain this action against the lessee holding over wilfully and'withoxit force as against him, there can be no doubt. There would be neither reason nor justice in requiring the lessee in such case to submit to an action of unlawful detainer before acknowledging the right of such grantee to the possession of the premises. His attornment to him must be considered as lawful and as made with the consent of the landlord.
Though the tenant could not dispute the title of the landlord, nor set up a paramount title or an adverse possession against either the grantor or grantee, nor the court inquire into the matter of title in general, it was still competent for the defendant, under the statute, to show that the plaintiff’s title and right of possession had been transferred to himself since the demise. These sections of the statute have so far assimilated this proceeding to actions for rent or in ejectment, in which it was always allowable for the
The proceedings in partition were binding and conclusive upon all parties to the record, and upon all those holding under them afterwards; and the plaintiff was estopped from denying that his title and right of possession had been extinguished by the transfer of both to the purchaser at the partition sale—Owsley v. Smith, 14 Mo. 153; Forder v. Davis, 38 Mo. 115. It was a sale by act of the parties themselves as well as by the judgment of the law, and not a sale in invitum like an ordinary sheriff’s sale under execution. The partition was had upon the petitiomof this plaintiff; and the sheriff’s deed in partition must stand upon the same footing here as if it had been a voluntary conveyance of the title by the plaintiff himself. The purchaser will be considered as his grantee, within the meaning of the statute.
. The matter did not involve an investigation of the merits of the title, but only the derivation and transfer of the lessor’s title to the lessee, the plaintiff’s right to recover the possession as a matter of fact, and his right to maintain this action. In such case the withholding of the possession by the defendant was neither wilful nor unlawful.
This position is not really inconsistent with the decisions which hold, under the former statutes, that this action could not be maintained by a plaintiff who had never been in the actual posssession, and who would be put to an action of ejectment to recover the possession, any further than the changes made in the act now require, by admitting proof of a derivation of title from the lessor, by heirs, devisees, grantees and assignees. The case of Blount v. Winright, 7 Mo 50, and Hatfield v. Wallace, 7 Mo. 112, and Warren v. Ritter, 11 Mo. 354, and Holland v. Reed, 11 Mo. 605, are no longer applicable. The same may be said of other like cases: Dunn v. Hunter, 25 Ala. 714; Dwine v. Brow, 35 Ala. 596. As against
It is unnecessary to invoke either of the other clauses of this fifteenth section. We are not now called upon to put a definitive construction upon them; but, for all the purposes of this case, we may presume that the judgment or decree, there spoken of, means a judgment or decree by which the tenant may be bound, and which takes the possession away from him •and his lessor, and not every judgment or decree that may be rendered against the landlord. It is very probable, also, that the latter part of the same clause refers to a sale made in the execution of a power to sell given in a deed of trust, and not to a sale under execution in invitum as to the owner.
Under a like statute, where the remedy before the justices was suspended, if the tenant alleged a right or title accrued since the commencement of the lease by descent, deed, or will of the lessor, it was said that “where the relation of landlord and tenant is completely dissolved, after the commencement of the lease, either by the act of the parties or by the act of the law, the justices ought not to proceed as if that relation continued to exist,” and that “where the tenant has acquired the title after the commencement of the lease, from the lessor himself, by descent, deed, or will, the relation of landlord and tenant is at an end, and the summary remedy to obtain possession no longer applies”—Debozear v. Butler, 2 Grant’s Cas. 421. This was by force of the peculiar provisions of the statute. So, hero, it is by force of the statute that evidence was admissible to prove a derivation of title from the lessor; and the effect of such proof, when made, must be the same in this case to the extent that it was allowed by the act. We have come to the conclusion, therefore, that the defence was good, and that the first instruction asked for by the defendant should have been given.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded.